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adelina deluna ∙
Common salt is sodium chloride (NaCl) which is composed of two atoms, one of sodium and one of chlorine.
Verla Becker ∙
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There are no hydrogen atoms in salt (sodium chloride). Salt is composed of sodium and chlorine ions, not hydrogen atoms.
2 atoms. NaCl
NaCl is the formula unit of sodium chloride (halite, rock salt, table salt, plain salt, common salt, edible salt etc.). NaCl has 2 atoms in the formula unit.
None. Pure table salt is NaCl. It contains only sodium (Na) and clorine (Cl) atoms.
A molecule of sugar (sucrose) has 22 atoms of hydrogen.
Salt (NaCl) is formed by ionic bonds, so it does not come in molecules. Instead, it is called a formula unit, and there are two atoms in this particular one.
0 atoms. I'm guessing you are suggesting table salt, which is sodium chloride. Sodium chloride only contains sodium and chlorine and no oxygen.
An element is a composition of many atoms. Thus you can hold NaCl (salt) in your hand. You can't hold the atoms it makes up.
There are no atoms of oxygen in salt. Salt, or sodium chloride, is composed of positively charged sodium ions and negatively charged chloride ions, without any oxygen atoms in its chemical structure.
In one molecule of common table salt (NaCl), there are two types of atoms: one sodium (Na) atom and one chlorine (Cl) atom. Each type of atom represents an element, so salt contains two elements: sodium and chlorine.
Table salt is not an atom itself, but it is composed of atoms. Table salt, or sodium chloride, is a compound made up of sodium atoms and chlorine atoms bonded together through chemical bonds.
In sodium chloride (table salt), the ratio of sodium atoms to oxygen atoms is 1:0, as there are no oxygen atoms present in pure table salt.